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Travel photos from Split, Croatia by travel photographer Brendan van Son of www.brendansadventures.com
Lighting of the Split Rock Lighthouse beacon on July 31, 2010, the 100th anniversary of the lighthouse on Minnesota's Lake Superior shore.
Split is the second largest city in Croatia. About 211.000 people lived there in 2012. The city is the biggest and most important one in Dalmatia. It is often called capital of Dalmatia. About 400.000 people live in the metropolitan region. Split is located at the Adriatic Sea. Its port ofters year-round connections to most islands of Dalmatia. There is an important shipyard in Split. Other sources of income are tourism, fishery, paper mills, cement works and some chemical industry.
Intérieur de la Cathédrale de Split.
La Cathédrale Saint-Domnius, consacrée en 650, rassemble tous les styles qui se sont superposés au fil des siècles dans l'ensemble du palais de Dioclétien !
Split est la deuxième ville de Croatie et un important pôle économique et culturel. Mais c'est surtout le plus étonnant centre-ville du pays avec le Palais de Dioclétien, immense quadrilatère de 38.700 m2, peu à peu remodelé par 1700 ans d'histoire. L'ancienne résidence de l'empereur romain est inscrite sur la liste du patrimoine mondial de l'UNESCO depuis 1979.
Split Film Filament; Second-year MFA exhibition; Thursday, October 10
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Split, seaport, resort, and chief city of Dalmatia, southern Croatia. It is situated on a peninsula in the Adriatic Sea with a deep, sheltered harbour on the south side.
A major commercial and transportation centre, the city is best known for the ruins of the Palace of Diocletian (built 295–305 ce). Collectively with the historic royal residences, fortifications, and churches in the city, the palace was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1979. Pop. (2001) 188,694; (2011) 167,121.
tekst Britanica
Wandering around Split waiting for our apartment to be ready for us.
Not sure if the lean is because I'm on a lean, I'm at an angle or is a camera artifact.
Die kroatische Hafenstadt Split im Winter.
Free for commercial/non-commercial use, but please provide a backlink to www.clfoto.at when used in a website.
Kommerzielle / nicht-kommerzielle Nutzung gestattet, ich bitte aber um Backlink auf www.clfoto.at.
Split, the largest city of Dalmatia, was (just like neighbouring Trogir) as the Greek colony in the 4th century BC. Roman emperor Diocletian had a palace built as a retirement residence near Salona, the capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia at that time.
After the Romans abandoned the site, the Palace remained empty for several centuries, but when Salona was sacked by Avars and Slavs in the 7th century, the walled Palace of Diocletian was settled by refugees from Salona.
Since the the palace has been occupied, with residents making their homes and businesses within the palace basement and directly in its walls. Today the remains of the palace form about half the old town and city center of Split.
In 1979 the historic center of Split was included into the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites.
Looking out of the window on an bleak morning. Pouring rain outside. In the backdrop the cathedral´s campanile. The right structure caught my eye - and so I decided to climb up to the little roof terrace of the building to have a better overview.